USC’s new defensive coordinator didn’t waste time schooling Trojans on new scheme
The arrangement wasn’t ideal for anyone involved, least of all the new defensive coordinator tasked with toughening up a unit that, for seven months, was barred from standing next to each other, let alone colliding.
But that moratorium on full-contact practice was lifted Wednesday, finally offering Orlando a long-awaited glimpse of what his USC defense is made of.
“Today will be the day,” Orlando said Wednesday morning. “This is where the separation begins.”
Orlando, who last coached defense at Texas, called the virtual install time “a blessing in disguise.” Even if it might only take his new defense so far.
“Until you go against live, at the end of the day you’re not going to trick everybody in terms of your scheme,” Orlando said. “You’re going to be based on how hard you run to the football, how you get off blocks and how you tackle.”
But those aren’t the only areas that were to be evaluated starting Wednesday. Considering how long players have had to learn the scheme, Orlando made clear he won’t be as forgiving when it comes to forgetting assignments.
“If you go out there and you don’t know what you’re doing after meeting with someone for seven months, that pretty much explains how much you care,” Orlando said. “That’s important to me. The more you put in, the more you get out.”
A clearer picture of USC’s new defense should crystallize in the coming days, with contact no longer limited. Orlando said he’s already adjusted his scheme, which relies on mixed fronts and aggressive blitzing, to fit USC’s personnel.
But full contact could always force further change.
The loss of Jay Tufele, who opted out to focus on the NFL draft, has already thrust senior defensive tackle Brandon Pili into the starting lineup.
“It left a big void in our defensive line, experiencewise,” Pili said. I just feel like now that burden is on me, being the veteran.”
Orlando has proven in previous stops that he’s capable of a quick reboot; though, never quite under the current circumstances he now faces. At Texas, Orlando oversaw a defense that improved from 80th to 24th in points allowed. Before that, his inaugural Utah State defense ranked seventh in points allowed.
In both cases, Orlando said, those defenses simply needed “a kickstart.”
“I think that’s what [I’ve done], the places I’ve been coming into, is just to try to free these guys up,” Orlando said. “It’s OK to fail, man. That’s what practice is about. Fail big.”
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